MANCHESTER terror victims have been supported by a foundation set up after the deadly IRA Warrington bomb, the Daily Express can reveal.

Tim Parry, 12, and three-year-old Johnathan Ball, died in the IRA attack in Cheshire, on March 20, 1993, which also injured 54.

Two years later, parents Colin and Wendy Parry created a fitting legacy by forming the Tim Parry Johnathan Ball Foundation For Peace.

Last night, the story of the Warrington bomb was told in BBC drama Mother’s Day, starring Line Of Duty star Vicky McClure. But before it was aired, the Parrys invited us to the foundation’s Peace Centre in Warrington to reveal how it has helped the survivors of last year’s Manchester Arena bomb.

They told us how their Survivors Assistance Network (SAN) has spent the last year helping 770 traumatised victims of the suicide bomb in Manchester on May 22.

Twenty-three people were killed, including the attacker, and 139 were wounded, more than half of them children. Hundreds more suffered psychological trauma.